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Markets

Bitcoin Japan Shares Slide After Dilutive EVO Fund…

Why Is Bitcoin Japan Raising Capital Now? Bitcoin Japan has approved a convertible bond and warrant financing package with Cayman Islands-based EVO Fund that could raise an estimated 9.66 bil

AnonymousCryptoCompass newsroom
July 18, 2026
6 min read
NEWS
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Why Is Bitcoin Japan Raising Capital Now?

Bitcoin Japan has approved a convertible bond and warrant financing package with Cayman Islands-based EVO Fund that could raise an estimated 9.66 billion yen ($59.5 million) in net proceeds over roughly 12 months, based on the initial exercise price. The Tokyo-listed company, formerly known as apparel wholesaler Marusho Hotta, said the package includes a 1.5 billion yen ($9.2 million) zero-coupon convertible bond and a second series of stock acquisition rights that could generate another 8.2 billion yen ($50 million) if exercised in full at the initial price. The structure gives Bitcoin Japan access to staged equity-linked funding rather than a single guaranteed capital raise. Only the bond tranche is committed upfront. The remaining proceeds depend on EVO Fund exercising warrants, which means the company’s broader investment plan is tied to future share-price performance and investor appetite for further issuance. The market reaction was severe. Bitcoin Japan shares closed down 26.7% at 99 yen on Friday after touching a year-to-date low of 87 yen. The selloff followed disclosures showing that the financing could create new shares equal to as much as 110.08% of the company’s existing share count if the bond converts at its floor price and all warrants are exercised.

How Dilutive Is The EVO Fund Deal?

The financing carries moving-strike pricing, with an initial conversion and exercise price of 138 yen and a floor of 69 yen. If the bond and warrants convert or exercise at the initial price, the company would issue about 70.3 million new shares, equal to 95.33% of its current share count. If the bond converts at the floor price and all warrants are exercised, the potential new shares would equal 110.08% of the existing share count. That dilution risk is central to the market’s concern because existing shareholders could see their ownership materially reduced if the company relies heavily on the facility. Bitcoin Japan said exercises are generally capped at 10% of outstanding shares per month and that its board can buy back the securities at their issue price. Those limits may slow the pace of dilution, but they do not remove the core issue: the company is seeking a financing path that could more than double its share count under certain pricing conditions. The structure resembles equity-linked facilities used by other Japanese listed companies pursuing crypto treasury strategies. EVO Fund has also financed Metaplanet’s bitcoin accumulation through a similar moving-strike model, making the deal part of a broader pattern in Japan’s public-market crypto treasury sector.

Investor Takeaway

The financing gives Bitcoin Japan a way to fund new investments, but it transfers a large part of the risk to existing shareholders. The market is reacting less to the bitcoin plan itself and more to the potential scale of dilution needed to finance it.

How Much Of The Raise Is Actually For Bitcoin?

Despite the company’s name and treasury strategy, bitcoin accounts for only about 7% of the planned proceeds. Bitcoin Japan set aside 662 million yen ($4.1 million) for its first bitcoin purchase, but that allocation is not funded by the upfront bond tranche. The company’s funding order places bitcoin behind other planned investments. The initial bond proceeds are allocated to private equity, while the bitcoin purchase depends on enough warrant exercises to first fund private-equity, rare-earth and robotics allocations. The broader allocation plan includes 3.76 billion yen ($23.1 million) for private equity investments, including pre-IPO AI deals, 3.5 billion yen for a $20 million rare-earth mining investment, 1.45 billion yen ($8.9 million) for a robot-as-a-service business in Tokyo and 290 million yen ($1.8 million) for working capital. Deployment is scheduled between August 2026 and February 2028. The conditional nature of the bitcoin allocation is important because Bitcoin Japan has not yet purchased any bitcoin since adopting its treasury strategy last year. A prior warrant program from December, allotted to Macquarie, raised 3.1 billion yen ($19.1 million) out of a planned 5.7 billion yen ($35.1 million) after the company’s stock declined. None of those proceeds went to bitcoin.

What Does The Earlier Warrant Program Show?

The December financing provides a useful warning for investors. That program raised only 54% of its target, and the company’s bitcoin allocation went unfunded. Instead, the proceeds were directed toward two AI infrastructure positions. Those investments included a fund interest corresponding to 100,800 SpaceX shares acquired at $122 each, to which the company assigned an unaudited reference value of about 2.8 billion yen ($17.2 million) as of June 30. The company also holds a 1.17 billion yen ($7.2 million) position in robotics startup Figure AI, carried at cost. Bitcoin Japan said “Bitcoin holdings are not a KPI,” adding that its sole measure is long-term intrinsic value per share. That framing reduces the likelihood that investors should view the company as a pure bitcoin accumulation vehicle. The company is instead presenting itself as a broader capital allocation platform spanning bitcoin, AI infrastructure, rare-earth mining and robotics.

Investor Takeaway

Bitcoin Japan’s strategy is not a straightforward bitcoin treasury trade. The company’s planned bitcoin purchase is relatively small, conditional on warrant exercises, and ranked behind several non-bitcoin investments in the funding order.

Why Does The Deal Matter For Japan’s Crypto Treasury Sector?

The raise comes as Japan’s listed crypto treasury sector faces closer scrutiny. Reports last year said the Tokyo Stock Exchange was examining tighter oversight of listed companies pursuing crypto treasury strategies, though no final decisions had been made at the time. Bitcoin Japan’s financial profile adds to the pressure. The company reported revenue of 2.96 billion yen ($18.2 million) and an operating loss of 462 million yen ($2.8 million) for the fiscal year ended March 2026, its eighth consecutive annual operating loss. Bakkt Holdings, Bitcoin Japan’s largest shareholder, will lend EVO Fund up to 2 million shares, equal to about 2.7% of shares outstanding, at no fee through August 2027. The company said the loan is limited to hedge sales against actual exercises and that Bakkt retains dividends and voting rights. Bakkt acquired about 30% of the company’s voting rights from RIZAP Group last August, with Bakkt International President Phillip Lord later installed as CEO. Bitcoin Japan said an independent committee found the financing necessary and appropriate under Tokyo Stock Exchange listing rules. Still, the share-price reaction shows that investors are focused on dilution, execution risk and the gap between the company’s bitcoin branding and its actual capital allocation plan. For Japan’s listed crypto treasury sector, the case shows how quickly market confidence can weaken when bitcoin exposure is paired with complex financing and broad non-core investment plans.